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The following is some information about the programs of two channels(频道).Here you can watch any program you like.
Sunshine TV
18:30 Children’s World:Hello Kitty
19:00 Today’s News
19:30 Weather Report _作业帮
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The following is some information about the programs of two channels(频道).Here you can watch any program you like.
Sunshine TV
18:30 Children’s World:Hello Kitty
19:00 Today’s News
19:30 Weather Report
&&&& The following is some information about the programs of two channels(频道).Here you can watch any program you like.
Sunshine&TV
18:30 Children’s World:Hello Kitty
19:00 Today’s News
19:30 Weather Report
19:40 Food and Health
20:10 Drama Serial(连续剧):Romance of the Three Kingdoms
21:25 Game Show:Lucky Winner
22:00 China Music TV
23:00 Programs Next Week
18:00 TV Classroom:English Around the World
18:30 A animal World&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
19:00 Documentary:In China
19:40 News in English
20:10 Sports World:Ping-pong Match (China vs Japan 22:00 Talk Show
22:30 News every Day
23:00 English Movie:Roman Holiday
1.Children would like to watch _________ on _________TV at 6:30 pm.&&&&&&&
A.Talk Show ,Sunshine&&&&&&&&&& B.Talk Show ,Life C.Hello Kitty ,Sunshine&&&&&&&&&& D.Hello Kitty ,Life[来源:学科网ZXXK]
2.To improve your English,you could watch _________at _________ every day.
A.English Around the World,18:00&&
&&&& B.Today’s News ,18:30 C.News in English ,19:30&&&&&&&&&&&&&& D.Roman Holiday,22:30
3.Tom would watch _________at 20:10 on Life TV.
A.Romance of the Three Kingdoms&&&&
B.Lucky Winner
C.Programs Next Week &&&&&&&&&&&&&& D.Sports News
4.John likes to watch news on TV.But he has to go to sleep before 23:00.How many news programs would he watch on Life TV?&&&&&
A.One.&&&&&&&&&& B.Two.&&&&&&&&&& C.Three.&&&&&&&& D.Four.
5.From this article,we can know_________.&&&&&
A.China Music TV is a program for old people.B.there are three programs before 19:00 on Life TV.C.there would be a movie at 23:00 on Life TV D.there are ten different programs on Sunshine TV.
1-5&&CADBCWorld Temperatures & Weather Around The World
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Useful weather InformationInteresting Weather TopicsRelated links – Current times around the world – Normal version – Show local times worldwide for your event.The Future is Here | New Jobs, New Prosperity and a New Clean Economy
The World is witnessing a historic, global shift in the way we power our homes our businesses and our economies.
Climate change is here.
How we respond is the only question that remains.
In America, President Obama recently signaled “We will respond to the threat of climate change…[we] cannot resist this transition…we must claim its promise. That is how we will maintain our economic vitality.”
This report demonstrates the huge wealth that can be created for New Zealand by building an economy based on 100% renewable energy, energy efficiency and sustainable transport.
If New Zealand fails to grasp these economic opportunities, the failure will be recorded in
New Zealand history as the key turning point towards our economic decline.
Help spark the Energy Revolution
In 2011 the world invested US$280 billion in renewable energy.
the global market for clean technologies is valued at more than FIVE trillion dollars.
Green Energy creates 4x MORE jobs THAN oil
50% of all New Zealand jobs rely on our clean green reputation.
Investment New Zealand estimates we can create $150 Billion high-value, low-carbon export economy by 2025.
70% of our export revenue is directly attributable to NZ's clean green reputation, worth $36.7 Billion to our economy each year.
Price Waterhouse Cooper stated that, should we choose it, New Zealand's share of the global market for clean technologies is estimated at up to $22 Billion per year.
A cleaner, smarter economy will bring us future prosperity.
Pollution will decrease and our Global clean green reputation will be strengthened.
Our energy supply and economy will be improved and huge local job opportunities will be gained.
NZ's Carbon Dioxide emissions from all energy use in 2050 (million Tonnes)
Annual oil imports for road transport by 2035 (Million Barrels)
"We need to discover what works for us, what gives us global advantage.
Find out what is best in our society and nurture it."
- Sir Paul Callaghan
When it comes to the expertise required to succeed in the clean energy economy, New Zealand is already ahead of the pack, the mindset required is a perfect match for our cultural DNA and our abundant natural resources.
As a Nation we know we ar creating in our garden shed and taking products to the world. We are a people who innovate, solve and succeed in overcoming challenges.
Investment New Zealand says we have Sixty of the world’s leading clean economy companies innovating, developing and commercializing clean technologies and climate change solutions right here, right now in New Zealand.
Investments in clean energy technologies resisted the global financial crisis better than any other sector, because the principle drivers that propelled those investments were still at work – climate change, energy security, and fossil fuel depletion (UNEP, 2009).
Already 70% of all of our electricity needs are met by renewable sources. The world’s largest geothermal turbine is in the ground at Kauwerau and generating electricity right now.
Countries around the world are turning to New Zealand for our geothermal engineering expertise.
Investment in clean technology yields 4 times more jobs than investment in Oil and yields better-paid jobs. While jobs in the fossil fuel economy were lost during the financial crisis, job growth in the green economy remained strong.
If we can realise the promise outlined in this report, New Z
$150 billion high-value, low-carbon export economy by 2025
Create tens of thousands of new jobs across the clean energy sector
100% renewable electricity
Improved energy independence and security
Added value to our clean green reputation, safeguarding income from primary industry exports and international tourism.
Where New Zealand falls down is in leadership. The countries whose governments are proactively driving this transition to clean up their economies are realizing the greatest growth benefits and opportunities. Soon New Zealand will be left behind and miss our rightful place on the wave.We need progressive and committed leadership from our government.
Many of our businesses are doing their best to seize new clean tech opportunities, but they are hampered by perverse policy settings and a lack of government commitment.
Conventional economic and political thinking in New Zealand is bound by doctrine on one hand, and a crisis of confidence on the other.
It is useful to understand the mix of policies, besides direct investment, these governments are putting in place to enable this green growth.
Carbon pricing
Direct financial incentives for clean technology
Energy efficiency incentives
Efficiency standards for buildings and products
Pollution reduction targets
Businesses cannot bring about this kind of leverage on their own.
Government needs to be the first mover.
Many of our global strategic partners have set up similar banks and earmarked multi-billion dollar investments in clean energy in order to deliver the benefits that transitioning to a clean economy will bring.
The bank’s priority will be to finance a new low-carbon infrastructure for New Zealand. The G
In partnership with the private sector, structure the financing of major projects.
Provide initial capital or guarantees
Create green investment bonds
Broker innovative financial solutions
Help realise the clean economy promise
The world’s financial markets have woken up to the fact that climate change is here and there is money to
the clean economy is experiencing a global boom.
New Zealand is a natural fit to take advantage of these economic changes, and in doing so, we will enjoy unprecedented economic prosperity, safeguard our clean green Nation for future generations and be a clarion call to the whole World, the future is here - new jobs, new prosperity and a new clean economy.
Greenpeace commissioned economic modeling from one of the world’s leading energy market analysts at the Institute of Thermodynamics of the German Aerospace Centre (DLR) to develop a pathway towards achieving 100% renewable energy by 2050.Who We Are
An independent organization of leading scientists and journalists researching and reporting the facts about our changing climate and its impact on the American public.
What We Do
Climate Central surveys and conducts scientific research on climate change and informs the public of key findings. Our scientists publish and our journalists report on climate science, energy, sea level rise . . . .
About Our Expertise
Members of the Climate Central staff and board are among the most respected leaders in climate science. Staff members are authorities in communicating climate and weather links, sea level rise, climate . . . .
Email Updates
Stories from Climate Central's Science Journalists and Content Partners
IPCC Says Climate Change is Here, World Needs to Adapt
Published: March 30th, 2014
The overall warming of the planet has had a clear impact on Earth&s natural systems and human society and will pose increased & and potentially disastrous & risks in the future if the world does not make a more concerted effort to adapt and try to prevent the worst possible outcomes.
That&s the continued message from the , the United Nations-established body made up of hundreds of scientists who review and summarize the state of climate science and the research into its impacts, ways to adapt to them and ways to mitigate the damage.
Global average surface temperature change to date in degrees Celsius.
Credit: IPCC Working Group I
The impacts of climate change and the ways in which both humans and nature can adapt to an altered environment are the focus of the second part of the IPCC&s fifth assessment report, which was released on Sunday. It follows the September release of the first portion of the report, which focused on the
and stated unequivocally that humans are behind the warming of Earth&s average temperature.
Climate change has already contributed to a 1.6&F rise in global average temperature since the start of the 20th century and the rate of warming is likely to increase into the 21st century.&The second report makes clear that in addition to a change in the global average temperature, other climate change impacts&observed to date have hit all regions of the world and affected everything from access to food and water to extreme weather.&
&In view of these impacts, and those that we have projected for the future, no one on this planet is going to be untouched by climate change,& Rajendra Pachauri, the chairman of the IPCC, said in the press conference announcing the report&s conclusions.
The report&has fewer specific predictions of future impacts compared to the last iteration released in 2007, but points out the significant risks climate impacts pose to globe's most vulnerable populations. It also has a greater emphasis on adaptation strategies, which range from improving urban infrastructure to creating drought-resistant crop varieties.
Compared to 2007&s report, the newest iteration &assesses a substantially larger knowledge base of relevant literature,& which allowed those assembling the report to consider a wider range of impacts, said Patricia Romero-Lankao, an author on the report and a sociologist with the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colo.
Among the impacts of climate change that are already occurring, the report calls out: shifts in the ranges of species and changes to migration patterns, which could
such as valuable changes in precipitation patterns, which affect the availability of water for drin the effects of climate extremes on crops, which could threaten food supplies and the livelihoods of the world& and increases in health impacts, for example the number of deaths from heat waves, like the one that killed thousands in Europe in 2003.
All of these impacts are also listed as major future concerns around the world. The report also calls out
as a major future concern, as it contributes to
and higher storms surges & issues that particularly affect those in low-lying coastal areas, where a substantial portion of the world&s poor live. Extreme weather events could also damage critical infrastructure, even in developed countries, if steps aren&t taken to strengthen it, as
and New York City&s subway system made clear.
The report also warns that climate change could exacerbate problems, such as drought,&that lead to conflicts around the world through migrations and disputes over resources.
&Climate change can lead to displacement, can lead to increased conflict,&&Pachauri said.
All of these impacts are expected to worsen in the coming decades if society fails to adapt to the changes that are already in play because of warming &locked in& to the climate system by past greenhouse gas emissions and if it fails to enact any meaningful measures to , the report makes clear. The more warming, the more dire the future impacts become.
&Increasing magnitudes of warming increase the likelihood of severe, pervasive, and irreversible impacts,& the report warns.
The first part of the fifth assessment report stated that global temperatures are likely to exceed 2.7&F above preindustrial levels by the end of the century but could reach as high as 8.64&F above
levels, depending on the levels of future emissions. At the Copenhagen climate summit in 2009, governments agreed to keep future warming below 3.6&F, which the report suggested was unlikely to happen because of the warming that past emissions have guaranteed. The third part of the assessment, focused on ways to mitigate climate change, will be released on April 13 after a meeting in Berlin.
The report examines the efforts at adaptation that have been made around the world to date, which vary widely between regions, and those that should be considered for the future.& Strategies mentioned in the report vary from establishing better building codes to spreading more efficient irrigation practices, with many that would provide benefits to society even without climate change.
A map showing the impacts climate change has had on human and natural systems and the level of confidence in those impacts.
Credit: IPCC Working Group I
&A lot of these things make sense anyway,& said Kevin Trenberth, a climate scientist also from NCAR, who was not involved with this report but has been an author and editor on past IPCC reports.
Trenberth suggested the report could be improved&by noting which adaptations strategies&would have the biggest impact and how costs for them would be covered. He did applaud the group for noting funding gaps for adaptation, which are particularly affecting developing nations, which are expected to see impacts out of proportion to what they have contributed to global warming.
Romero-Lankao said that the process of putting together the report was an educational one for her, illuminating the process of international negotiations.
&We scientists think that all what is needed from us in these negotiations is to ensure accuracy, balance, and clarity of message in our findings.&That is not the case for policy makers for whom a lot is at stake,& Romero-Lankao told Climate Central in an email.
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The federal Renewable Fuel Standard encourages U.S. corn ethanol producers to boost production to 9 billion gallons by 2008.
Copyright & 2015 Climate Central.}

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